Woodland leads US Open by 2

Credit to Author: Tempo Online| Date: Sat, 15 Jun 2019 12:42:29 +0000

PEBBLE BEACH, United States (AFP) – Gary Woodland drained a 50-foot birdie put at his final hole on Friday to cap a six-under par 65 and take a two-stroke US Open lead over former champion Justin Rose at Pebble Beach.

Woodland’s tee shot at his final hole, the par-four ninth, nestled in a divot in the fairway, but he still managed to reach the green in two to close out his round in sensational style.

“That was just a bonus,” Woodland said. “Hit a beautiful drive. I was in the divot, a pretty deep divot. We were a little indecisive what we were going to do. We tried to take a little less club and hit it hard and play out to the safe to the right and was nice to knock it in.”

Gary Woodland of the United States (Andrew Redington/Getty Images/AFP)

Gary Woodland of the United States (Andrew Redington/Getty Images/AFP)

Woodland was more pleased with a tough up and down for par at the eighth, where he sank a clutch 15-foot putt after chipping from the greenside rough.

Woodland became just the third player to post a 65 in US Open play at Pebble Beach, a record set by Tiger Woods in 2000 and equaled by Rose on Thursday.

His 36-hole total of nine-under 133 is one shot better than Woods posted had in 2000, when he led by six on the way to a crushing 15-stroke triumph.

Woodland, a three-time winner on the PGA Tour who led last year’s PGA championship at the halfway stage on the way to his best major finish –- a tie for sixth — has plenty of marquee names on his tail.

Rose, the 2013 US Open winner, fired a second-round 70 for 137. Former British Open winner Louis Oosthuizen of South Africa had seven birdies and six bogeys in a wild 70 for 136.

Four-time major winner Rory McIlroy and South African-born American Aaron Wise were a shot back on five-under 137, McIlroy with a 69 and Wise a 71.

Five players were tied at four-under, a group that included two-time defending US Open champion Brooks Koepka, who carded his second-straight 68. He was tied with Americans Chez Reavie, Chesson Hadley and Matt Kuchar and England’s Matt Wallace.

As Pebble Beach remained receptive in cool, overcast weather, 15-time major champion Woods was unable to take advantage.

The US superstar stumbled to a bogey-bogey finish in a one-over par 72 that left him even for the tournament.

‘’Not a very good finish,’’ Woods said shortly, admitting he was ‘’still a little hot’’ shortly after signing his scorecard.

Although birdies were still plentiful, Pebble Beach proved it could still bite.

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